Xiaolan Zhao
Third Military Medical University
9 Papers
4 Citations
Xiaolan Zhao is an academic researcher from Third Military Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Waist. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications.
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Papers
Discrepant gut microbiota markers for the classification of obesity-related metabolic abnormalities.
Qiang Zeng,Dongfang Li,Dongfang Li,Yuan He,Yinhu Li,Zhenyu Yang,Xiaolan Zhao,Yanhong Liu,Yu Wang,Jing Sun,Xin Feng,Fei Wang,Jiaxing Chen,Yuejie Zheng,Yonghong Yang,Xuelin Sun,Ximing Xu,Daxi Wang,Toby Kenney,Yiqi Jiang,Hong Gu,Yongli Li,Ke Zhou,Shuai Cheng Li,Wenkui Dai +24 more
TL;DR: Common biomarkers were identified for the obesity patients with high uric acid, high serum lipids and high blood pressure, such as Clostridium XIVa, Bacteroides and Roseburia, which hold the potential to predict obesity-related metabolic abnormalities, and interventions based on these biomarkers might be beneficial to weight loss and metabolic risk improvement.
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Optimal cut-off values of BMI, waist circumference and waist:height ratio for defining obesity in Chinese adults.
Qiang Zeng,Yuan He,Shengyong Dong,Xiaolan Zhao,Zhiheng Chen,Zhen-Ya Song,Guang Chang,Fang Yang,Youjuan Wang +8 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that WHtR and WC may be better indicators of CVD risk factors for Chinese people than BMI.
The association of chronic kidney disease and waist circumference and waist-to-height ratio in Chinese urban adults.
TL;DR: Central obesity, defined by WC and WHtR, may be more closely correlated with CKD for Chinese urban adults and increased obesity indices were positively associated with the odds of CKD.
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Associations between Body Composition Indices and Metabolic Disorders in Chinese Adults: A Cross-Sectional Observational Study.
TL;DR: Among the body composition indices, BMI predicted four of the five evaluated metabolic disorders in both gender groups and inversely associated with HDL-C; similar relationships were identified between the metabolic parameters and BFP, WHtR, and WHR.
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Association between metabolic status and gut microbiome in obese populations.
Qiang Zeng,Zhenyu Yang,Fei Wang,Dongfang Li,Yanhong Liu,Daxi Wang,Xiaolan Zhao,Yinhu Li,Yu Wang,Xin Feng,Jiaxing Chen,Yongli Li,Yuejie Zheng,Toby Kenney,Hong Gu,Su Feng,Shuangcheng Li,Yuan He,Ximing Xu,Wenkui Dai +19 more
- 01 Aug 2021
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors found that the Gut microbiome is significantly distinct between metabolic healthy obeses (MHOs) and MUOs (MUOs), implicating the potential of the gut microbiome in stratification and refined management of obesity.
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